He joined Harry Evans as co-editor of Quiz, a satirical weekly, to which he also regularly contributed examples of his poetry. He left the partnership (of, by then, Quiz and The Lantern) on 31 August 1894, and left for Coolgardie, where he worked on J. M. Smith's weekly Goldfield Courier and its sister daily, the Golden Age.[3] In 1896 he was elected secretary to the Coolgardie Stock Exchange[4] and the Coolgardie Railway League.[5] He was next editor of the Coolgardie Miner, and gained a great deal of knowledge on the subject of mining,[6] and served as John Kirwan's Coolgardie secretary. In 1905 he left the Miner for the position of secretary to the North End Gold Mining Company Ltd.[7]
Around 1911 he moved to Perth, where he joined the staff of The Sunday Times and around 1920 was promoted to editor, succeeding J. E. Webb,[8] who left for a position with The Bulletin. He retired around 1925, but continued contributing to the Sunday Times and other journals.[6]
In 1938 he was granted a Commonwealth Literary Pension of £1 a week.[1]
Family
Chandler married Isabella Agnes McGinn (ca.1855 – 16 April 1888).
He married again, to Julia Addison (died 9 August 1950), daughter of George Addison MD., FRCS, on 17 September 1892.
They later had a home at 27 Ridge Street, South Perth.
He had two daughters:
Lorna married Peter Charles Mulhall of Perth on 8 February 1919; they lived at East Brunswick, Victoria
^"Pioneer Journalist Dead". Kalgoorlie Miner. Vol. 47, no. 12, 263. Western Australia. 18 October 1941. p. 4. Retrieved 12 May 2016 – via National Library of Australia.
^Chandler, Alfred T.; Alfred Thomas (1926), The case for secession : how Federation oppresses and represses Western Australia / Alfred Chandler, W.A. Secession League, W.A. Secession League